Science Results

Science Results

Images of asteroid Steins, taken by the OSIRIS Wide Angle Camera during the fly-by, were presented at a press conference on 6 September.
Published: 6 September 2008
First results and images from Rosetta's fly-by of asteroid Steins will be presented at a press conference, which will be webcast live, on Saturday 6 September starting at 12:00 CEST.
Published: 4 September 2008
INTEGRAL's detection of polarized gamma-rays from the Crab pulsar, reported in the 29 August issue of Science, has significant implications for many aspects of high-energy accelerators.
Published: 29 August 2008
A powerful collision of two massive clusters of galaxies has been observed in detail with both the Hubble Space Telescope and Chandra X-ray Observatory, providing new insights into the properties of dark matter
Published: 27 August 2008
[28.08.2008]
The mechanism underlying the escape of oxygen ions from Earth has been unveiled with the help of data from the Cluster constellation of spacecraft
Published: 27 August 2008
XMM-Newton has discovered a rare, very massive cluster of galaxies at a redshift z~1. The object, designated 2XMM J083026+524133, is the most X-ray luminous known at its distance and beyond
Published: 25 August 2008
The August 2008 issue of ESA's flagship magazine, the ESA Bulletin, features an article presenting some of the most important science results from Venus Express
Published: 19 August 2008
This dazzling image of a region of celestial birth and renewal commemorates Hubble's 100 000th orbit around the Earth
Published: 11 August 2008
[11.08.2008]
A 3-D "magnetic snapshot" of the heart of a magnetic reconnection region has been obtained in-situ by the four satellites of the ESA Cluster mission, at one-third of the distance to the Moon from Earth.
Published: 11 August 2008
The Hubble Space Telescope has identified thousands of ancient globular clusters in the Virgo cluster of galaxies. These discoveries improve our understanding of the life and evolution of cannibal galaxies.
Published: 5 August 2008
Observations with the VIMS instrument on Cassini have identified the presence of liquid ethane in one of the large lake-like features observed on Saturn's moon, Titan.
Published: 31 July 2008
New details have been announced about the exoplanet CoRoT-Exo-4b. Data from CoRoT and ground-based observations have established the nature of the exoplanet and its parent star.
Published: 28 July 2008
Scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope have found the largest sample of very distant galaxies seen to date: ten promising candidates thought to lie at a distance of 13 billion light-years (a redshift of ~ 7.5).
Published: 24 July 2008
A nova explosion is usually detected first at optical wavelengths. The recent nova V598 Puppis, although being among the brightest novae, was instead discovered first in X-rays by XMM-Newton, some four months after the optical emission had peaked
Published: 18 July 2008
[27.06.2008]
A recent study, using Cluster data, reveals how the most powerful emission of terrestrial origin, Auroral Kilometric Radiation, is beamed into space. The result has important implications for radio studies of magnetospheres of planets.
Published: 27 June 2008
In spite of being one of the best studied X-ray sources, Hercules X-1 continues to intrigue astronomers as results using INTEGRAL observations confirm
Published: 17 June 2008
After more than 17 years of operation, the joint ESA/NASA mission Ulysses will officially conclude in July this year. The remarkable achievements of this mission were recalled at a press conference held at ESA Headquarters in Paris on 12 June.
Published: 12 June 2008
Analysis of XMM-Newton data of G350.1-0.3, a bright galactic radio source, reveals it to be a young and bright supernova remnant (SNR). These results are published in the 10 June issue of ApJ Letters
Published: 9 June 2008
[09.06.2008]
Some of the most explosive phenomena in the Universe are due to a physical process known as magnetic reconnection. Fundamental aspects of this process are still not fully understood but new advances, using Cluster data, have recently been reported by a team led by scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Published: 9 June 2008
The COROT team has detected two new exoplanets and a new type of object. These discoveries were announced this week at the IAU Symposium on Transiting Planets.
Published: 22 May 2008
26-Apr-2024 09:56 UT

ShortUrl Portlet

Shortcut URL

https://sci.esa.int/p/gwVqa5A